LyricFind To Expand Asian and African Operations, Launches Teams in India and South Africa LyricFind's new India service has focused on extensive charts and back catalog in Hindi and Marathi, with more regional languages on the way

By Debarghya Sil

You're reading BIZ Experiences Asia Pacific, an international franchise of BIZ Experiences Media.

LyricFind
Darryl Ballantyne, CEO LyricFind

LyricFind on Thursday announced its expansion in India and South Africa. The company said that its Vietnam team will now cover significant new east Asian languages.

LyricFind's new India service has focused on extensive charts and back catalog in Hindi and Marathi, with more regional languages on the way.

In addition to the new language team in India, LyricFind's long-standing team based in Hanoi, Vietnam has scaled up to expand its capacity, adding lyrics in both Cantonese and Mandarin to its current roster which includes Malay, Bahasa, Thai, Tagalog and Vietnamese.

LyricFind's Johannesburg team will cover ten southern African languages including Afrikaans, Zulu, Sotho, Xhosa, among others. The company assured that works on other African languages are for later this year.

Commenting on the expansion plan, Darryl Ballantyne, chief executive officer, LyricFind, said, "As something we've long anticipated, the demand for lyrics in a wide range of languages continues to grow,"

"We're committed to offering high-quality, vetted, licensed lyrics to service providers, platforms, and fans around the world, and we've found the best way to do that is to invest in local organizations that have the right expertise to provide the level of service our partners expect."

He said music consumption across Africa and Asia is growing rapidly, and lyrics have a powerful part to play in this growth.

LyricFind, a leader in licensed lyrics, provides its partners with an extensive catalog of accurate and fully legal lyrics, licensed from all the majors, as well as 6,000 other publishers and PROs around the world.

"We have the largest publishing team in the world, and the highest number of professional lyric editors in the business. The reason major partners like Google and Amazon turn to us as a primary lyrics provider is for the proven quality our process generates, and our focus on building a substantial local presence and expertise around the world to ensure that," notes Ballantyne.

"Our teams know the local music landscape and work tirelessly to gather, edit, and timestamp lyrics in their territories' respective spoken languages. Well-trained, professional teams with local knowledge in important markets are the key to the extensive coverage and the on-going excellence of our service."

Debarghya Sil

BIZ Experiences Staff

Former Correspondent

Marketing

Content Marketing Trends for 2020: Are we ready?

With every click on the keyboard, there is content being added to this virtual infinite universe that is being created, trillions of pieces of content get created every day

Leadership

What Will the Corporate Board Look Like in the Next 5 Years?

The board of the future will look a lot different as our society pushes for more diversity, a purpose-driven culture, better corporate reputation, sustainability, talent and resilience.

News and Trends

Harvard Comes to India - An Opportunity for BIZ Experiencess?

Online programmes offered by foreign universities are becoming popular but need local support

Science & Technology

What You Need to Know About This New Cybersecurity Trend

There's a new trend in cybersecurity that's likely going to play a critical role in keeping our data secure and private: confidential computing. Here's why and how it's going to change some of mankind's most important industries.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.